Hey, that's all I'm lookin' for, cochese. I'm not sure I've convinced anyone here that I've been omitting my personal take on this situation. If you don't like the law, then change it. And it's wholly plausible, even prior to the guilty finding, that he was guilty. But we can't decide on a whim which laws to follow and which to ignore. Of course, we kinda do every time we speed, every time we get high or know someone who gets high/has a stash - but that, legally, makes us criminals. All of us.
If you have ethical objections to his conviction, great. Have ethical convictions; I'm glad people have passionate opinions about current events other than "hurr hurr michael phelps got high." But all I ask is that folks recognize that ethical convictions are as meaningful as a pocketful of lint in a court of law. So we can be disappointed in the outcome, we can be bothered by the law, but we should not be shocked that the law was applied as it was. That's all I'm sayin'.
[quote name='RAMSTORIA']i hate when people sue for emotional distress...
but he also got sued for assault, and as far as i can tell there have been no criminal charges hes been found guilty of. so thats equally maddening. if he had been arrested for assault, tried & convicted, and then sued, i wouldnt have nearly as much of a problem with it as i do with the case just being civil.[/QUOTE]
OJ Simpson was not criminally guilty, but found civilly guilty. (for the murders, not whatever football heist thing he recently did).